Many Rammans in Uttarakhand: Jak and Bhumyal Renditions

IF 0.8 3区 艺术学 0 THEATER THEATRE JOURNAL Pub Date : 2024-06-06 DOI:10.1353/tj.2024.a929507
Prateek
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Although the tradition is prevalent in many villages in the Garhwal district of Uttarakhand, the documentary focuses on the Ramman (dedicated to Jak) of Jaal Malla and Choumasa, two villages in the Rudraprayag district, and the Ramman (dedicated to Bhumyal) of Salud and Dungra, twin villages in the Chamoli district.</p> <br/> Click for larger view<br/> View full resolution Figure 1. <p>Map of the Jaal Malla, Choumasa, Salud, and Dungra villages in Uttarakhand, India. (Source: Prateek.)</p> <p></p> <p><strong>[End Page E-1]</strong></p> <p>Before filming, I sought permission to shoot footage in these four villages from the village council or elders. In most cases, I took this permission orally for two reasons: First, the participants felt more comfortable with oral permissions due to my position as a village outsider, as well as their local cultural norms and low literacy rates. Second, some participants insinuated that the written word intruded upon a terrain that venerates the oral traditions of the Himalayas. So, rather than seek written permission, I did what my grandmother, a native of Uttarakhand, taught me: seek the blessing of the village deity in front of those whom I filmed. The villagers also underlined their implicit permission by providing me with accommodation, as these hamlets are in peripheral locations that lack easy road access and hotels.</p> <p>D. R. Purohit, former faculty member at Hemvati Bahaguna Garhwal University, Srinagar, and a historian of the Garhwal region, provided guidance on identifying the four filming sites, which would have been otherwise difficult to locate. He has remained a significant influence on my ethnographic research. Purohit is a well-regarded expert on Garhwal, with a strong desire to assist other scholars researching the Garhwal region of Uttarakhand. Meanwhile, the credit for the documentary and my ethnographic process goes to my grandmother, Parvati Pandey, who since childhood has enriched me with regional folklore from the hill state while sensitizing me to the nuances of Uttarakhand’s demigods and deities. Her pedagogy instilled in me a critical eye toward oral traditions without succumbing to the desire to sensationalize or exoticize certain rituals, such as the possession ceremony. Nonetheless, I have deemed it necessary to restrict the documentary to audiences ages 18 and above due to the sensitivity of its content. This discerning gaze further allowed me to subject oral traditions to a critical analysis similar to that of written documents, a methodology advocated by Belgian historian and anthropologist Jan Vansina in his seminal work <em>Oral Tradition as History</em>.<sup>1</sup> My grandmother remained a regular port of call whenever the subtleties of the form puzzled me. Her interpretations and interpolations of Uttarakhand folklore set the stage for the documentary and kept me motivated throughout a difficult shoot. We often stumbled along narrow roads on our way to these villages. On one side sat a mountain where landslides are common; on the other lay a deep ravine. The cab driver who accompanied me was scared to drive, especially after a landslide compelled us to change the route. He suggested retreating several times, reminding me of the common belief in Uttarakhand that mountains and lakes seek annual <em>balis</em> (human sacrifices). Writer and Uttarakhand cultural historian Namita Gokhale has articulated this belief when describing how in the hill station of Nainital, Uttarakhand, it is thought that a popular lake “exacts a bali, a human sacrifice, every year . . . locals recognize that the elements are demanding their due.”<sup>2</sup> These challenges have made me understand the transformative character of these elements. 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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

  • Many Rammans in Uttarakhand: Jak and Bhumyal Renditions
  • Prateek (bio)

This essay is meant to serve as a compendium to my documentary, Many Rammans in Uttarakhand: Jak and Bhumyal Renditions, which can be accessed here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISJ3Mnea0MU. The film highlights the diversity of the folk performance tradition of Ramman in the Indian hill state of Uttarakhand by analyzing two variants of the ritual, each dedicated to a village patron deity: one to Jak (alternatively known as Jakh) and the other to Bhumyal. Although the tradition is prevalent in many villages in the Garhwal district of Uttarakhand, the documentary focuses on the Ramman (dedicated to Jak) of Jaal Malla and Choumasa, two villages in the Rudraprayag district, and the Ramman (dedicated to Bhumyal) of Salud and Dungra, twin villages in the Chamoli district.


Click for larger view
View full resolution Figure 1.

Map of the Jaal Malla, Choumasa, Salud, and Dungra villages in Uttarakhand, India. (Source: Prateek.)

[End Page E-1]

Before filming, I sought permission to shoot footage in these four villages from the village council or elders. In most cases, I took this permission orally for two reasons: First, the participants felt more comfortable with oral permissions due to my position as a village outsider, as well as their local cultural norms and low literacy rates. Second, some participants insinuated that the written word intruded upon a terrain that venerates the oral traditions of the Himalayas. So, rather than seek written permission, I did what my grandmother, a native of Uttarakhand, taught me: seek the blessing of the village deity in front of those whom I filmed. The villagers also underlined their implicit permission by providing me with accommodation, as these hamlets are in peripheral locations that lack easy road access and hotels.

D. R. Purohit, former faculty member at Hemvati Bahaguna Garhwal University, Srinagar, and a historian of the Garhwal region, provided guidance on identifying the four filming sites, which would have been otherwise difficult to locate. He has remained a significant influence on my ethnographic research. Purohit is a well-regarded expert on Garhwal, with a strong desire to assist other scholars researching the Garhwal region of Uttarakhand. Meanwhile, the credit for the documentary and my ethnographic process goes to my grandmother, Parvati Pandey, who since childhood has enriched me with regional folklore from the hill state while sensitizing me to the nuances of Uttarakhand’s demigods and deities. Her pedagogy instilled in me a critical eye toward oral traditions without succumbing to the desire to sensationalize or exoticize certain rituals, such as the possession ceremony. Nonetheless, I have deemed it necessary to restrict the documentary to audiences ages 18 and above due to the sensitivity of its content. This discerning gaze further allowed me to subject oral traditions to a critical analysis similar to that of written documents, a methodology advocated by Belgian historian and anthropologist Jan Vansina in his seminal work Oral Tradition as History.1 My grandmother remained a regular port of call whenever the subtleties of the form puzzled me. Her interpretations and interpolations of Uttarakhand folklore set the stage for the documentary and kept me motivated throughout a difficult shoot. We often stumbled along narrow roads on our way to these villages. On one side sat a mountain where landslides are common; on the other lay a deep ravine. The cab driver who accompanied me was scared to drive, especially after a landslide compelled us to change the route. He suggested retreating several times, reminding me of the common belief in Uttarakhand that mountains and lakes seek annual balis (human sacrifices). Writer and Uttarakhand cultural historian Namita Gokhale has articulated this belief when describing how in the hill station of Nainital, Uttarakhand, it is thought that a popular lake “exacts a bali, a human sacrifice, every year . . . locals recognize that the elements are demanding their due.”2 These challenges have made me understand the transformative character of these elements. Thus, I pay my obeisance to all beings—humans and nonhumans—especially the mountains who have made it possible for me to make this documentary.

This introductory essay provides context to Ramman and its difference from Ramlila, the...

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北阿坎德邦的许多拉曼人:雅克和布米亚的演绎
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要: 北阿坎德邦的许多拉曼人:普尔提克 (简历) 这篇文章是我的纪录片《北阿坎德邦的许多拉曼人:雅克和布米亚尔的故事》的简编:Jak and Bhumyal Renditions》的资料汇编,该纪录片的网址为:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ISJ3Mnea0MU。该片通过分析两种不同的拉曼仪式,强调了印度北阿坎德邦山区拉曼民间表演传统的多样性,每种仪式都献给村里的守护神:一种献给 Jak(又称 Jakh),另一种献给 Bhumyal。虽然这一传统在北阿坎德邦 Garhwal 地区的许多村庄都很盛行,但纪录片重点介绍了 Rudraprayag 地区两个村庄 Jaal Malla 和 Choumasa 的 Ramman(供奉 Jak),以及 Chamoli 地区两个村庄 Salud 和 Dungra 的 Ramman(供奉 Bhumyal)。 点击查看大图 查看完整分辨率 图 1.印度北阿坎德邦 Jaal Malla、Choumasa、Salud 和 Dungra 村庄地图。(资料来源:普尔提。)[第 E-1 页末] 在拍摄之前,我向村委会或长老征得了在这四个村庄拍摄的许可。在大多数情况下,我都是口头征得同意的,原因有二:首先,由于我是村外人,加上当地的文化规范和低识字率,参与者对口头许可感到更加放心。其次,一些参与者暗示,书面文字侵入了喜马拉雅山崇尚口头传统的地域。因此,我没有寻求书面许可,而是按照我祖母--一位土生土长的北阿坎德邦人--教我的那样,当着拍摄对象的面寻求村神的祝福。村民们还通过为我提供住宿的方式强调了他们的默许,因为这些小村庄地处偏远,缺乏便捷的道路交通和酒店。D. R. Purohit 是斯利那加 Hemvati Bahaguna Garhwal 大学的前教师,也是 Garhwal 地区的历史学家。他对我的人种学研究一直有着重要影响。普罗希特是一位广受赞誉的加瓦尔专家,他非常愿意帮助其他研究北阿坎德邦加瓦尔地区的学者。同时,这部纪录片和我的民族志研究过程也要归功于我的祖母帕尔瓦蒂-潘迪,她从小就给我灌输山区地区的民间传说,让我了解北阿坎德邦半神和神灵的细微差别。她的教学方法向我灌输了对口头传统的批判眼光,而不会屈服于将某些仪式(如附体仪式)煽情化或异国化的欲望。尽管如此,由于纪录片内容的敏感性,我认为有必要限制 18 岁及以上的观众观看。比利时历史学家和人类学家扬-范西纳(Jan Vansina)在其开创性著作《作为历史的口头传统》1 中提倡对口头传统进行类似于书面文件的批判性分析。她对北阿坎德邦民间传说的解释和诠释为这部纪录片奠定了基础,并在艰难的拍摄过程中激励着我。在前往这些村庄的路上,我们经常在狭窄的道路上蹒跚而行。一边是经常发生山体滑坡的大山,一边是深不见底的峡谷。陪同我的出租车司机不敢开车,尤其是在山体滑坡迫使我们改变路线之后。他几次建议我们撤退,让我想起了北阿坎德邦的一种普遍信仰,即高山和湖泊每年都会寻求巴利斯(人祭)。作家兼北阿坎德邦文化历史学家纳米塔-戈哈勒(Namita Gokhale)在描述北阿坎德邦奈尼塔尔(Nainital)山庄时明确阐述了这一信仰,她认为一个著名的湖泊 "每年都要举行一次巴利祭,即人类祭祀......当地人认为这些元素在要求他们应得的东西。因此,我向所有生命--人类和非人类--表示敬意,尤其是那些让我得以拍摄这部纪录片的大山。这篇介绍性文章介绍了《拉姆曼》的背景及其与《拉姆里拉》的不同之处。
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来源期刊
THEATRE JOURNAL
THEATRE JOURNAL THEATER-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
40.00%
发文量
87
期刊介绍: For over five decades, Theatre Journal"s broad array of scholarly articles and reviews has earned it an international reputation as one of the most authoritative and useful publications of theatre studies available today. Drawing contributions from noted practitioners and scholars, Theatre Journal features social and historical studies, production reviews, and theoretical inquiries that analyze dramatic texts and production.
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